by Siobhan Bery April 05, 2005
by xXbobbyXx February 27, 2017
Any claim that can be expressed as negative, thanks to the rule of double negation. This rule states that any proposition P is logically equivalent to not-not-P. Prove P is true and you can prove P is not false.
Example1:
1. If Unicorns had existed, then there is evidence in the fossil record.
2. There is no existence of Unicorns in the fossil record.
3. Therefore, Unicorns never existed.
Example 2:
Jason: 'Hey, did you that Danish and Deriana are dating?'
Ashley: 'how do you know?'
Jason 'Sam told me'
Ashley: 'I don't think so, those two are pranksters. They play mind games and talk shit all the time and no one has actually seen them together. They're cyber bullies that have nothing better to do with their life plus they're both committed to other people, they're just cyber friends'.
Jason: 'IDK
Ashley: 'C'mon, don't be a pussy like Sam and believe everything you hear or read, if you can't prove it, don't presume it'.
Example1:
1. If Unicorns had existed, then there is evidence in the fossil record.
2. There is no existence of Unicorns in the fossil record.
3. Therefore, Unicorns never existed.
Example 2:
Jason: 'Hey, did you that Danish and Deriana are dating?'
Ashley: 'how do you know?'
Jason 'Sam told me'
Ashley: 'I don't think so, those two are pranksters. They play mind games and talk shit all the time and no one has actually seen them together. They're cyber bullies that have nothing better to do with their life plus they're both committed to other people, they're just cyber friends'.
Jason: 'IDK
Ashley: 'C'mon, don't be a pussy like Sam and believe everything you hear or read, if you can't prove it, don't presume it'.
Why is it that people insist that you can't prove a negative? I believe it is the result of two things.
1. Disappointment that induction is not bullet proof, airtight and infallible.
2. A desperate desire to keep believing whatever one believes even if all the evidence is against it and not being able to prove that the P-Word is proven to be true.
1. Disappointment that induction is not bullet proof, airtight and infallible.
2. A desperate desire to keep believing whatever one believes even if all the evidence is against it and not being able to prove that the P-Word is proven to be true.
by practical proposition December 18, 2017
when your talking to someone and they say something that you agree with or you could be surprised, spread the word ya heard
by HOLLA AT A WHITE GIRL March 13, 2003
A Christological phenomenon in which the same word or phrase pops up over relatively short period of time, usually a few days or weeks. These words inspire a check in the spirit of a believing person, who responds to the repetitive language by paying attention to the development of the characteristic the word refers to in their life, by perhaps studying the word in the context of Scripture, and/or by discussion with fellow believers.
Melissa: "I'm so overwhelmed by the concept of being a pilgrim right now! This world is not my home!"
Sarah: "Did you just say 'pilgrim'? That is such a nerd word for me right now!"
Sarah: "Did you just say 'pilgrim'? That is such a nerd word for me right now!"
by SuperOne January 15, 2010
by Dr. Shatner June 06, 2004
by Word as a bird[er] than you. October 10, 2005

